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Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist, challenges the traditional economic assumption that humans are rational actors who always make logical decisions to maximize their utility. Through a series of clever experiments, anecdotes, and analyses, Ariely demonstrates that our decisions are systematically and predictably irrational. He argues that these irrationalities stem from inherent psychological biases and heuristics that consistently influence our behavior, often without our awareness.
By Charles ItuahDan Ariely, a behavioral economist, challenges the traditional economic assumption that humans are rational actors who always make logical decisions to maximize their utility. Through a series of clever experiments, anecdotes, and analyses, Ariely demonstrates that our decisions are systematically and predictably irrational. He argues that these irrationalities stem from inherent psychological biases and heuristics that consistently influence our behavior, often without our awareness.